think before you tweet
DoorDash Delivery Discourse, And More Of This Week's 'One Main Character'
Every day, somebody says or does something that earns them the scorn of the internet. Here at Digg, as part of our mission to curate what the internet is talking about right now, we rounded up the main characters on Twitter from this past week and held them accountable for their actions.
Each day on twitter there is one main character. The goal is to never be it
— maple cocaine (@maplecocaine) January 3, 2019
This week, we've got unhinged MacBook purchasing, a sports personality telling on himself, a bad Ozempic take and more.
Sunday
@PBSgays
The character: @PBSgays, ghostee, not a great host
The plot: In what was one of the last Main Character tweets posted in 2023, X user @PBSgays told their followers about coming home to find that one of the friends their roommate had invited round was someone who had ghosted them (twice).
According to the post, they took great pleasure in kicking the guy out of their apartment, and holding the door open "while watching him get his stuff."
Best feeling today.
— BLT (@PBSgays) December 31, 2023
My roommate brought over her group of friends to watch a movie. I came home and one of them was a guy who ghosted me twice (my dumb self). I asked him to leave and the dude was just shocked. Literally held the door open while watching him get his stuff.
My roommate and I are not friends, just there to live. Now frustrated for what I’ve done but BABE, I’m not going to let a guy in my house who ghosted me.
— BLT (@PBSgays) December 31, 2023
The repercussion: Responses to this one were mixed; some people backed @PBSgay's decision to make them leave, while others think it was an unnecessary move.
I agree. It’s not about not being being “healed”. No one who’s disrespected me can be in my house.
— Ishmael Mayhew (@ishcontent) December 31, 2023
I'll be damned if I'm paying rent and contributing to bills someplace to then be told I can't have a guest or friend over because my roomate doesn't know how to handle rejection like an adult.
— Derrick McCoy (@pichumania) January 1, 2024
this is insane to me and i don’t understand ppl who are like “this was a mature response, was he supposed to hide in his room?” like no, be in your house. i would’ve been like “wasn’t expecting a ghost from christmas past to visit” and gone about my business https://t.co/ainY3dpso1
— ashley ray (@theashleyray) January 2, 2024
never leaving this ridiculous website pic.twitter.com/spWGUzjEN1
— adrian (@yourpalcrawf) January 1, 2024
So you interrupted their movie to kick this guy out, ruined the vibe, and then turned around and bragged about it online. This is ten times more narcissistic and toxic than whatever he did to you.
— RJ Aguiar (@DamnItRJ) December 31, 2023
OMGGGGG I wish I could have seen his face when you told him to get out. Honestly good for you. You’re the one paying rent not him lol I’ve never been in a situation where I told someone that did my dirty to get out of my house but I bet that must have felt empowering
— @migs.b (@migsb_OF) December 31, 2023
now why would you share this
— Thor Lindberg (@iskaltis) December 31, 2023
Darcy Jimenez
Monday
Jason Whitlock
The character: Jason Whitlock, TV personality, problematic figure in sports journalism
The plot: If you aren't familiar with Jason's work in either print or on ESPN and FS1, congrats: you dodged a bullet. He's an infamous talking head who has a long history of saying dumb, offensive and shocking things, and he's one of the best punching bags for sports fans and journalists. What did he reveal about himself this week? His highly-specific internet searches, of course.
I’m looking at NFL standings on https://t.co/mwKPcWYZM0. This is the ad running above the standings. How is this possible? Appropriate? pic.twitter.com/GlMtT3VY1f
— Jason Whitlock (@WhitlockJason) January 1, 2024
The repercussion: Thus began the parade of people pointing out that the internet revolves around cookies, targeted ads and companies tracking what you're most likely to purchase. Awkward.
hahahahah who wants to tell this dude how the algorithm works??!?!??
— Tommy Beer (@TommyBeer) January 1, 2024
My guy, how do you still not know how targeted ads work in the Year of Our Lord 2024?
— Alisha Grauso (@AlishaGrauso) January 2, 2024
Mine shows an ad for hanging art. Might wanna stop google searching for dudes going balls deep on ya, bro pic.twitter.com/1RcQYi6gbl
— have you tried the lasagna (@SethDaSportsMan) January 2, 2024
What’ve you been searching?? Usually those ads are algorithmic
— Jason (@bigjay2101) January 1, 2024
When he enabled cookies he thought he was getting a treat
— HARD FACTOR (@HardFactorNews) January 2, 2024
Jason Whitlock wondering why he gets porn targeted ads https://t.co/jogP1c7kCA pic.twitter.com/r5ZGf5JaS8
— Dan Baxter (@baxter4133) January 2, 2024
Jason Whitlock after learning about cookies: https://t.co/HJ1jQEFN2w pic.twitter.com/4uP02GtDK0
— Alan Hoffmann, Professional English Teacher (@AlanHoffmann) January 1, 2024
Jared Russo
Sunday
@Ermer
The character: Ermer, bad opinion-haver, heck-a wicked gross-o
The plot: Last week, an X user going by @PopCulture2000s posted a video of singer Christina Aguilera recently performing her 2002 hit song "Dirty." They praised her longevity, it was a normal, positive tweet and everybody was having a good time — until X user @itme_ermer decided to be gross about it.
Not only did they needlessly imply that Christina Aguilera looks good because of an alleged use of prescription diabetes and weight-loss drug Ozempic, they drag Lana (Del Ray, presumably) into their weird fantasy as well. Ick.
Ozempic really came and saved the girls. I want Lana on it so baddddddd https://t.co/UY4NBnaMaa
— ermer (@itme_ermer) December 31, 2023
The repercussion: The reaction to the misogyny and body shaming was swift and loud. And while some of the responses had their own grossness with a homophobic twist, many other replies were rightfully dismissive of Ermer's extremely bad tweet.
Ermer has chosen to tweet through it, and reply to a surprising number of critics. This alone is a kind of prison.
this is ugly as fuck
— 𝖆. 𝖘𝖕𝖎𝖈𝖊 ଘ(੭˃ᴗ˂) (@theangeltijero) January 1, 2024
You a grown man
— Ju. 🅴 (@NotUncleJu) January 3, 2024
she deserves better fans than this
— lesego. 🪩 (@LeeLovesBey) January 1, 2024
Such a chronically online thing to say about another human. Who raised you?
— valor gosch (@goschvalor) January 2, 2024
I love how Lana just living rent free in your head loving her body just as it is…
— Always on-call (@inallcreashun) January 2, 2024
Ah, yes. Wishing disordered eating upon a woman who is simply existing. How kind of you.
— Miss Caine 🕯 PDX (@obeymisscaine) January 3, 2024
Grant Brunner
Monday
Ayman Al-Abdullah
The character: Ayman Al-Abdullah, CEO, unhinged MacBook purchaser
The plot: While some of us were nursing hangovers or watching movies, X user and software company CEO Ayman Al-Abdullah welcomed in the New Year with this truly ridiculous bit of posting. In the below tweet, he claims that he buys a brand new MacBook at the beginning of every year, keeping nothing from his previous computer.
"If it makes me even one percent more efficient," he says, "it pays for itself in the first week."
I start every year with a brand new MacBook Pro
— Ayman Al-Abdullah 🧱 (@aymanalabdul) January 1, 2024
Fresh Start. Brand new install - nothing transferred from the last one
If it makes me even 1% more efficient it pays for itself in the first week pic.twitter.com/NnveEWr0Qb
The repercussion: It is, obviously, completely ridiculous to buy a brand new MacBook every single year, not to mention incredibly wasteful — and people were also skeptical of his claim that this bizarre practice makes him any more efficient.
Something needs to be done about the LinkedIn-Americans https://t.co/7EzUSe5buX
— pnew year same pnørm (@paleonormie) January 2, 2024
What you definitely want in this world is a CEO who doesn't know how to clean things up or maintain them. https://t.co/ISomHrF4Ig
— Heidi N. Moore (@moorehn) January 3, 2024
Seems super inefficient tbh
— Osso Unlimited 🐊 (@ossoinc) January 1, 2024
Nothing transferred from the old one…”everything is backed up in the cloud” 🤣 common man, this is so unnecessary. Starting 2024 with the weirdest “flex”
— AztkSmooth (@AztkSmooth) January 1, 2024
I am starting to kind of like how the new Twitter exposes you to the stupidest people in the world. https://t.co/CKWk05Y8ZT
— Brenden Gallagher (@brendengallager) January 3, 2024
I assume this is a joke? Did I miss a meme you’re riffing off of?
— Dr. Syed Haider (@DrSyedHaider) January 1, 2024
I start every year with a brand new identity.
— Roshan Patel (@roshanpateI) January 1, 2024
New name. New passport. New family. Fresh start. https://t.co/2LigRlWaTO
Darcy Jimenez
Monday
Raven
The character: Raven, X user, displeased DoorDash customer
The plot: There's a good chance you've seen this post, or responses to it, on your timeline over the past few days, because it sparked a hell of a lot of discourse. X user @rah_ven shared a screenshot of a conversation in which her DoorDash delivery driver told her to "come get" her food from his car.
"Is DoorDash not delivery anymore or??" she wrote.
Is DoorDash not delivery anymore or?? pic.twitter.com/qlwzK5RkvR
— raven ☘️ (@Rah_ven) January 1, 2024
The repercussion: Lots of people in the replies were on Raven's side, agreeing that they'd be annoyed or would refuse to tip if a delivery person didn't bring the food to their door. Many others, however, argued that the platform, DoorDash, itself is to blame, for contributing to a gig economy in which workers have to complete as many orders as quickly as possible to earn anywhere remotely near a decent wage.
The debate then quickly evolved into one about ableism — some people argued that those with disabilities have the right to expect their food to come to their door, while others maintained that it's the responsibility of DoorDash and similar companies to make this possible for their overworked, underpaid delivery drivers.
“Ok come get it” pic.twitter.com/tRPVUwNDWY
— Im just a cat (@TwiiterXVids) January 2, 2024
Tell them you're removing 10 cents off of their tip for every step you take.
— Malcolm FleX (@Malcolm_fleX48) January 2, 2024
these new doordash options for lazy people are WILD pic.twitter.com/4ivY5786Ol
— doomer (@uncledoomer) January 4, 2024
Sorry to say, DoorDash does not exist for disabled people. It’s not designed for disabled people. The workers where I’m from in the Midwest make ~16 an hour, and the longer they take the less they get paid. Petition the company to make changes to accommodate you, not the worker. https://t.co/L9dE99M0iG
— khanate (@polishXcellence) January 3, 2024
I just shot my DoorDash driver (86 years old) in the chest with a sawed off shotgun because he was one minute late. He died.!
— Prank Stallone (@theCJS) January 4, 2024
so is the doordash discourse always started by someone being mad at an individual driver for acting in a way that a system incentivises (& often necessitates) instead of being mad at the system itself
— Shaun (shaunvids on bsky) (@shaun_vids) January 3, 2024
ugh my door dash servant is being so disobedient today
— katie (@skatie420) January 3, 2024
People screaming at each other about this but there's a clear business opportunity here for the savvy entrepreneur: A company that picks up the food from the driver and delivers it to the customer https://t.co/xWu8Pvy1e6
— I'm nice and normal (@InternetHippo) January 3, 2024
Darcy Jimenez
Read the previous edition of our One Main Character column, which featured Simone Biles's husband (whoever that is), Obama, a cruel Christmas stunt and Nikki Haley ignoring the role of slavery in the Civil War.
[Image credit: Jon Tyson]